The book is about an idea that is converted into a billion dollar business, about a belief that an idea can be implemented and about formulating right strategy for converting an idea into a business. The plot harmoniously weaves around complex business fundamentals, required to set up, run and make a business successful, presented in lucid, easy to understand style. The novel is about implementation, about challenges that can be overcome, about success, about friendship, about passion, and about fun above all! All in all a hilarious and inspiring story on entrepreneurship and idea possibilities!

The book has got good and encouraging reviews from readers so far.

Dr. T. R. Madanmohan ( Ex Associate Professor IIM Bangalore ) says, “Reading ‘Who is that lady?’ brought vividly the moments of celebration and anguish of "identification of business opportunity", validation and construction of business model and implementation. A wonderful, written as a novel, that should be read by all current and future business leaders. Wish the book was available around 2005 for my class of Managing Technology led business at IIM Bangalore. I am sure the class would have devoured and gained much more from the book.”

Sathish Sheshadri ( Management Consultant at IBM) says, “India is renowned for using stories to convey great life lessons. Who is that Lady could well become such a legendary story on the topic of innovation and entrepreneurship. Everyone from students to CEOs will find a lot to reflect on, from the pearls of wisdom that the authors have shared through the protagonist, Pratik.”

Major Pooja Gupta says, “The book makes you think... if there is anything in this world which is impossible.”

Subir Dhar (Principal Consultant at Infosys) says, “This book will inspire India’s restless youth to take up entrepreneurship.”

Neerav Nimesh (Entrepreneur) says, “An entertaining book, which is not only a good novel but also a very good book on management. The author has been able to explain the fundamentals of every aspect of business whether marketing, planning, strategy, organizational structure, H.R., lines of communication, team work, goal setting etc and has done so without appearing to dispense "gyan".

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

o Wireless Power – Power will be transmitted wireless, Billions of people without electricity will get power the way it happen with cell phone with wireless transmission, battery might not be required in cell phone and other device and may be charged wireless power , Convergence of Telecom Companies with Electric companies

o Renewable Energy and DC Power Homes – Smart grid will enable smooth integration of Renewable energy integration with grid, More and more appliances will run on DC power and ultimately migrate towards DC Power Homes

o Energy Farms – In Future majority of work will be automated or be done by robots – agriculture, manufacturing, army, automated driving flying, service---What will robots need ? only Energy …so tomorrow will be energy farms like of agriculture farms of the past…We humans will work for producing energy for robots!!

• Solving energy crisis and sustainability simultaneously

o Energy crisis and Global warming has simple solution. Energy can neither be created nor destroyed. It can be changed in different form

o C+O2= CO2 greenhouse gas and danger to sustainability, future research will figure out to get C from CO2 in economic feasible –energy crisis solved and sustainability and global warming solved

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Obama’s ban on outsourcing and offshoring is in the news again. I shared my views on this topic one and half year back when Obama became the President . I wrote then

“If Obama discourages companies to outsource to countries like India, then companies will have a choice either do work in house in US or outsource the work to companies in US. Both the above solutions will not be economically attractive, so companies will have to reconsider Make Vs Buy option and increasingly rely on third party products rather than in-house customized IT solutions.”

Cloud Computing

I revisited my earlier analysis today and I believe that this analysis still holds true. The only major development in last couple of years is the rise of Cloud Computing. So in Make vs Buy Analysis, choice has become wider in Buy Option – apart from Third Party Products, Cloud Computing is also an available option now.

Obama’s ban will only accelerate the trend towards Cloud Computing

Job creation

Will this create new jobs?

The problem of Job creation needs to be analyzed from the global perspective. Global Solution may be creation of additional new jobs for all abilities in all countries.

Every country produces its own mix of "creative or knowledge minds", “process oriented minds” and “ physical labour”. So each country needs to create jobs for all three above categories.

Earlier in general logic of offshoring was that if US is able to offshore its physical labour and process oriented jobs then majority of workforce will move upwards in creative or knowledge jobs. Hence US will be better off. This logic however proved to be flawed. Process oriented minds and physical labour cannot find employment in creative or knowledge professions thus leading to unemployment in US.

Similarly current logic of banning offshoring and leting the process oriented and physical jobs remain in US is also flawed.

You cant eat your cake and have it too. One one hand US wants to have dominant share of worlds knowledge and creative jobs on the other hand US doesn’t wants to let go physical and process jobs. This wont be sustainable.

US has disproportionate large share of Worlds capital and number of MNC's, If other countries stop importing and encouraging local production and services then how will US companies survive? Profit that MNC's create worldwide supports corporate functions and investors income in US.

Only sustainable solution for job creation is to work towards increasing global jobs pie and attain global optimum.

However Governments are always tempted to achieve country level optimum by giving incentives for creating the jobs in their country at the expense of the jobs in other countries ( offshoring, reverse onshoring, local production, tariff barriers, tax incentives etc)

If all countries follow local optimum, this will self stabilize at new inefficient solution where majority is worse-off.

Solution is to increase the Global job pie, rather than fight for additional share of existing job pie by creating artificial incentives.

I believe, the long term solution is to create large R&D in further new areas and increase share of R&D employment in total global employment. Once new technologies become viable, market will take care of creating additional jobs in downstream- manufacturing, agriculture, infrastructure and services.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

This question is often asked by SME’s, by VC’s evaluating companies and by startups discussing their survival plans.

In our family SME business of manufacturing equipments, my uncle often asks me how can he compete with big players? So far he has been successful with similar functionality product but with half the price than biggies. But how else can he compete and scale up his business?

I remember answering similar question when we developed and won Business Plan competitions for a niche software product startup while in B school. VC’s and evaluators were asking about how we would compete with MNC’s in that space and we were answering about product competitiveness. Our assumption was that rest will follow…How naïve we were!!

Now after few years of consulting experience and having seen working of both big and small companies first hand and also discussing with my peers across industries working in big firms, I am of firm view that small companies (SME and startups) can compete and beat Big Companies.
Though it looks counter intuitive, big companies have large scale for volume purchasing, R&D, product development, market reach, marketing spend, brand name but so do they have their own share of problems which comes with scale and quarterly stock market demands...

So how can SME’s beat Big companies?

1. Price:

Yes Price …Big companies are always in pressure to deliver profits and measured on percentage profitability (rather than overall profit). They have the limit to which they can lower their prices… They have large cost overheads which negates to large extent the advantage they get in scale driven lower production cost.

Big companies are run on profitability metrics for different products, customers and regions. Thanks to all these softwares and spreadsheets of business analysis that product line and regional managers can get profitability analysis by products, regions, customers in real time.

Big companies have different product lines. Earlier some companies, while bundling, used to reduce the price of one product line to make it up in other but as real time analysis is improving, these bundling decisions will get more complicated and might lead to internal fights across product lines…

Earlier if a particular account was very important to the Big Company, they sometimes used to penetrate this account with very low price even with negative margin. But this is become increasingly difficult as now with information about prices spreading very fast across regions and customers, a price discount to one customer can lead to lowering of prices across customers…

So bundling across product lines and selective price reduction in different regions or to customers are becoming increasingly difficult for big companies.

Small companies can simply lower the price and get big companies’ share.

2. Service – Profitability

Customer service is one of the most important areas, where Small companies can beat Big companies. The reason is that in most Big companies, Service group is a separate organization run with different metrics and profitability requirements. Keeping the Organization’s existing customers happy and increasing product sales is not the direct metrics of service organization. Service response from big companies has been a major frustrating point for most customers and small companies can leverage this strategically to beat big companies...

I have seen many SME’s providing free and quick service to customers and even keeping their service staff in and around customer premises. That can be the major differentiators for SME’s.

3. Silo – Regions and Products

Big companies have different silos, some companies have product level silos, and some have regional level silos. The different silos of product groups and regions are run by different profit divisions. Frequent M&A’s add to these silos.

There is very little collaboration (instead competition sometimes to chase same customers) across these divisions.

If the solutions demand the offering of customer solutions in different locations say India, Dubai and South Africa and these locations are part of different profit centers then I bet, big company will have hard time developing a good proposition and small companies can take advantage of this...

Similarly if customer wants solution combining different products and these products are run by different divisions then big companies will again have hard time.

I have heard instances where divisions even offer competitors product as part of their solution instead of sourcing it from other divisions. Their logic is that company’s other internal divisions are not flexible and are not giving competitive deal. Small companies can take advantage of this and deliver better solution.

On this collaboration note, in one of my consulting assignments I have seen CEO of a big European company desperately trying to have collaboration among groups and reduce overall company SG&A. Major areas identified were real estate (duplication of office buildings), travel savings thru bulk deal with airlines and hotels, communication savings with company wide plans and office supplies etc. Group CEOs of these divisions agree in principle but in practice their staff was non-cooperative and daily argued against this collaboration. If that is the situation of CEO driven initiative, one can imagine the situation across daily local sales decisions…

4. Response Time & Flexibility

With size, big companies can become very rigid and inflexible and anything which is not in their routine will be met with resistance, will require large response time and probably result in inaction.

Big companies are run by processes, guidelines and metrics and whenever there is deviation, there is problem. A typical employee in a big company is generally risk averse and instead of sticking his neck out and making decision, he will follow usual process and escalate to others, others will also do the same and ask for detailed business case/justification. This chain goes on till somebody takes the decision and if risk is more reward is less, it will be inaction...

This creates long response time and not appropriate action

Some of the examples of deviation can be pricing, payment terms, currency, warranty, inventory, delivery time, service level agreements, customizations, upgrades

Reasons can be analyzed from game theory and collective decision making, reward for right decision is little and personal risk of punishment from wrong decision is large which creates strong bias for inaction and risk averse behavior.

Smart small companies take note of some of the above inflexibilities on part of big companies and can turn them in advantage for themselves.

5. New Accounts vs. Existing Accounts

Conventional wisdom says that chances of success with new customer are better than chances of getting share from existing customers from competitors.

I have seen small companies focusing their energy on new customer accounts. These small companies face strong competition from big companies in new accounts.

I believe small companies will be better off, if they pay more focus on existing accounts of big companies. This is counter intuitive but true...

Why?

How many new customers you have got this quarter? A popular Wall Street metrics for gauging big companies performance

That creates strong bias for growth and business development in big companies focusing on penetrating new customers

Nothing wrong with that, but with limited resources this comes at the cost of existing customers.

Call it post purchase dissonance effect or inability of big companies to treat existing customers with same attention as new customers, the disgruntlement starts in existing customers. Some of the reason for this disgruntlement can be points discussed earlier i.e. poor service and inflexibility on part of big companies.

Existing customer’s perspective becomes that their existing suppliers are taking them for granted. If a small company comes with a better value proposition to these customers, the small company can replace the existing supplier (big company)

In one of my consulting assignment, CEO wanted sourcing of new vendors primarily because his existing vendors were not paying attention to his account. His existing vendors were not proposing any new innovation in pricing or in business model. In another instance, I saw a reverse auction being done for identifying new vendors only and existing vendors were asked not to participate in it.

6. New Products: Sustaining Innovation vs. Disruptive Innovation

This last point is about products. Why? Because most of the small companies in early phase deal with product issues more than other issues. As written in Clayton Christensen books, Innovators Dilemma and Innovators Solution, existing big companies are good at sustaining innovation.

There is no point for Small companies to develop a better featured product unless matched by lower price.

What big companies are not good at is disruptive innovation. Game changing innovations for a simple reason of fear on cannibalization of their existing product lines.

Often when disrupting innovation comes into the market, big companies purchase small companies and often run them as separate division till the market develops for these innovations.

There are many examples across industries where big companies missed disruptive innovation in their industry e.g. Kodak’s late entry into digital camera market, Nokia’s late entry into touch phone market.

During this time frame small companies can develop disruptive new products and can beat big companies in their own game...

Understand Big Companies

Apart from the above points, small companies need to understand psychological profile of MNC’s and Big Companies.

Till entrepreneur is running big firms, things are bit different (though run by whims and fancies of entrepreneur with less professionalism, firm does not have above disadvantages).

Later when a company is run by professionals, they run the company by

• Processes …not initiatives• Review by metrics...• Dividing and Managing divisions
This in turn creates
• Non risk taking behavior...and resistance to sticking neck out
• Expectation of sustaining existing venture vs. new risk taking approach
• Individual behavior for fighting for his silo and focusing on his review metrics
• Non confronting reality in market and competitive analysis…Bottom line is we are doing good

Reasons can be analyzed from game theory and collective decision making, reward for right decision is little and personal risk of punishment from wrong decision is large which creates strong bias for inaction, following process and risk averse behavior

So becomes difficult to identify problems for top management and CEO’s till it’s too late

Small Companies can overcome Quality Bottleneck

Often Big companies have advantage over small companies in Quality of Products. The product quality is improvised by following process approach over the time and here Big companies have advantage.

Quality Challenge small companies face is that they
• don’t have testing resources and facilities,
• enough customers in early phase to identify all problems
• specialized resources to identify and rectify problems

Here small companies can use outsourcing for rigorous testing to improve quality of their products.

There are already specialized software testing firms. For hardware and equipments testing third party companies are also coming up. Hence, they can help small firms to improve their quality

Inference

Small companies can understand challenges of big companies and take advantage of them. Many small companies have successfully done so, but we hear about them only when they become successful and large. I have seen small companies overcoming Big MNC’s in every industry with entrepreneurial zeal, focused efforts and good luck …

Latest one in Telecom Industry is Huawei… (Why Huawei is successful is for later post…)

The book is about an idea that is converted into a billion dollar business, about a belief that an idea can be implemented and about formulating right strategy for converting an idea into a business. The plot harmoniously weaves around complex business fundamentals, required to set up, run and make a business successful, presented in lucid, easy to understand style. The novel is about implementation, about challenges that can be overcome, about success, about friendship, about passion, and about fun above all! All in all a hilarious and inspiring story on entrepreneurship and idea possibilities!

The book has got good and encouraging reviews from readers so far.

Dr. T. R. Madanmohan ( Ex Associate Professor IIM Bangalore ) says, “Reading ‘Who is that lady?’ brought vividly the moments of celebration and anguish of "identification of business opportunity", validation and construction of business model and implementation. A wonderful, written as a novel, that should be read by all current and future business leaders. Wish the book was available around 2005 for my class of Managing Technology led business at IIM Bangalore. I am sure the class would have devoured and gained much more from the book.”

Sathish Sheshadri ( Management Consultant at IBM) says, “India is renowned for using stories to convey great life lessons. Who is that Lady could well become such a legendary story on the topic of innovation and entrepreneurship. Everyone from students to CEOs will find a lot to reflect on, from the pearls of wisdom that the authors have shared through the protagonist, Pratik.”

Major Pooja Gupta says, “The book makes you think... if there is anything in this world which is impossible.”

Subir Dhar (Principal Consultant at Infosys) says, “This book will inspire India’s restless youth to take up entrepreneurship.”

Neerav Nimesh (Entrepreneur) says, “An entertaining book, which is not only a good novel but also a very good book on management. The author has been able to explain the fundamentals of every aspect of business whether marketing, planning, strategy, organizational structure, H.R., lines of communication, team work, goal setting etc and has done so without appearing to dispense "gyan".